Game Preview: Golden State Warriors vs. Oklahoma City Thunder
A pair of teams from the Western Conference take to the hardwood in search of a win in the Sooner State in the opening slate of the NBA In-Season Tournament. The Golden State Warriors are on the road as they make the trip to take on the Oklahoma City Thunder on Friday night. Golden State edged Sacramento 102-101 at home Wednesday night, failing to cover the line as a seven-point favorite, in their previous contest. Oklahoma City fell 110-106 at home to New Orleans Wednesday night, losing outright as a 3.5-point favorite, in their previous game. In the all-time regular season series between the teams, the Thunder own a 142-121 advantage but the Warriors have won nine of the last 10 meetings, including a 136-125 home victory in the most recent matchup on April 4, 2023.
Golden State Warriors Look for Fifth Straight Win
Golden State survived a wild game with Sacramento to earn their fourth straight win after losing their season opener to the Suns. The Warriors enter this game 4-1 and stand atop the Pacific Division standings, one game ahead of the Lakers and Clippers for the top spot. Against Sacramento, Golden State led 12-3 early only to trail by three after the opening quarter. The Warriors led by one at the half, were down as many as 11 in the third quarter and by five after three quarters. In a back-and-forth final quarter, Golden State traded the lead multiple times in the final minutes before Klay Thompson hit the winning bucket on a pullup jumper with 1.1 seconds to play. The Warriors shot 48.1% from the floor, including 11 of 31 from three-point range, lost the rebounding battle 48-36 and turned the ball over 17 times yet prevailed. Stephen Curry led the Warriors with 21 points as one of six Golden State players in double figures in the win.
On the year, the Warriors are 14th in the league in scoring offense as they put up an average of 112.8 points per game. Golden State stands 10th in rebounding as they collect an average of 47.4 boards per contest while they are 7th in assists by handing out an average of 27.6 dimes per contest. The Warriors are 5th in the league in scoring defense by allowing 104 points per contest. Stephen Curry leads the team with 31 points, 5.2 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game this season. Andrew Wiggins adds 11.4 points per game while Draymond Green puts up 7.7 points, 4.3 rebounds and seven assists per night. Klay Thompson (16.5 points), Kevon Looney, Chris Paul, Moses Moody, Dario Saric, Gary Payton II and Jonathan Kuminga (11.3 points) are solid secondary scoring options. Golden State is 14th in the league in field goal percentage as they shoot 46.7% from the floor as a team on the year. The Warriors are eighth in the league in threes per game by knocking down 13.6 triples a night while they are 13th in three-point shooting by hitting 35.4% from beyond the arc as a team.
The Warriors have no current injuries to report so they should have their full rotation available for this contest.
Oklahoma City Thunder Trying to Bounce Back
Oklahoma City let a big first quarter lead fade away as they were dropped by the Pelicans at home Wednesday night for their second loss in three games. The Pelicans dropped to 3-2 on the season and stand second in the Northwest Division, one game behind the Nuggets for the top spot in the division. Against New Orleans, Oklahoma City led by as many as 20 in the opening quarter, by 19 after the first stanza and by as many as 22 in the second quarter before things got away from them. The Thunder saw their lead trimmed to eight at the half and trailed by one after three quarters. Oklahoma City was down as many as 12 in the fourth quarter and got within one at 105-104 with 1:38 remaining but couldn’t retake the lead. The Thunder shot 43.2% from the floor, including just seven of 34 from three-point range, and lost the rebounding battle 58-49 in the game. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder with 20 points, five rebounds and eight assists in the loss.
This season, the Thunder are 15th in the league in scoring offense as they average 111.4 points per game on the year. Oklahoma City is 26th in rebounding with 42.4 boards per contest while they are 21st in assists with 23.6 dimes a night. The Thunder are 16th in the league in scoring defense as they allow an average of 111.8 points a night. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander leads the team with 24.8 points, 6.8 rebounds and 6.6 assists per contest. Luguentz Dort is the most reliable secondary scoring option with 11.8 points per game. The Thunder look to Josh Giddey (12.6 points, six rebounds, 4.4 assists), Chet Holmgren (15.8 points, 7.2 rebounds), Cason Wallace (7.4 points) and Tre Mann as other secondary scoring options. Aleksej Pokusevski, Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, Jalen Williams (16 points), Ousmane Dieng, Kenrich Williams, Darius Bazley and Aaron Wiggins have to be contributors if they hope to have success. Oklahoma City is 9th in the league in field goal percentage as they shoot 47.4% from the floor as a team on the year. The Thunder are 20th by hitting 11.6 threes per game and 11th in three-point shooting by hitting 36.3% of their attempts from beyond the arc.
Jaylin Willams (hamstring) has yet to suit up with a strain: he is questionable for this contest. Kenrich Williams (back) remained out Wednesday and has missed the first five games of the season. Watch for any updates on their statuses heading toward tip-off.